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New Orleans Privateers baseball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Athletic team of the University of New Orleans

New Orleans Privateers
2025 New Orleans Privateers baseball team
Founded1970
UniversityUniversity of New Orleans
Head coachDax Norris (1st season)
ConferenceSouthland
LocationNew Orleans,Louisiana
Home stadiumMaestri Field at Privateer Park
NicknamePrivateers
ColorsRoyal blue, silver, and navy[1]
     
College World Series appearances
1974*, 1984
*at Division II level
NCAA regional champions
1984
NCAA Tournament appearances
1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1996, 2000, 2007, 2008
Conference tournament champions
American South 1989
Sun Belt: 1978, 1979, 2007

TheNew Orleans Privateers baseball team is a varsity intercollegiate athletic team of theUniversity of New Orleans inNew Orleans, Louisiana, United States.[2] The team is a member of theSouthland Conference, which is part of theNational Collegiate Athletic Association'sDivision I. The team plays its home games atMaestri Field at Privateer Park inNew Orleans, Louisiana. The Privateers are led by head coachDax Norris.

History

[edit]

Bob Hines, first coach (1970–1971)

[edit]

Formed as early as 1970, the University of New Orleans, formerly known as Louisiana State University of New Orleans, started NCAA play in theDivision II ranks. Bob Hines served as the first coach in UNO baseball history, directing the team to an 8–19 record in 1970 – its first season – followed by a 14–25 mark in 1971. The losing record in 1971 would be the last for the UNO program until Tom Schwaner's 1986 squad went 29–30. UNO defeatedSoutheastern Louisiana 7–6 on Mar. 13, 1970 in the first game in school history.

The Maestri years (1972–1985)

[edit]

In 1972, Illinois native,Ron Maestri, was hired by then chancellor Homer Hitt as the second head coach to lead the Privateers. Following two consecutive winning seasons in the first two seasons with their new coach, the Privateers made school history in 1974 with a Division II College World Series berth. In Game 2, the Privateers recorded their first CWS win in a defeat ofValdosta State by a score of 13–9. They followed with a 6–2 win overCentral Missouri State in game 6. After being bested byUC-Irvine, the Privateers bounced back to 2 consecutive wins overUniversity of New Haven and previously unbeaten UC-Irvine. The comeback fell short, however, as the Privateers lost the final elimination game against UC-Irvine 14–1.

On July 1, 1975, the Privateers made the jump to Division I, hoping to build on their previous success.[3] They joined the newly formed Sun Belt Conference in which they won the conference tournament in both 1978 and 1979 before becoming an NCAA Division I independent in 1980. After appearing in five NCAA Regionals in eight years, the Privateers finally made Louisiana sports history. In 1984, the University of New Orleans was the first in-state school to appear in theDivision I College World Series.[4] In Game 1, the Privateers were defeated by the reigning CWS championsTexas by a score of 6–3. They bounced back to defeat and ultimately eliminate Big 10 representativeMichigan. In Game 10 on June 6, however, the University of New Orleans fell toOklahoma State in 10 innings and was eliminated.

During Maestri's 14 seasons as head coach, the Privateers had a winning record each year, made seven appearances in theNCAA tournament, one College World Series appearance, and won at least forty games six times, while all other coaches in the school's history have had four such seasons. The program's overall record during his tenure was 517–245–1 (.678), as he is by far the winningest coach in school history.

Tom Schwaner era (1986–1999)

[edit]

Following the success of Maestri, Tom Schwaner was hired as the third head coach for the Privateers. After seven years competing as Division I Independents, the Privateers would join 6 teams in the formation of theAmerican South Conference. As members, the Privateers would win the regular season title in 1988, while winning the conference tournament in 1989. On July 1, 1991, the Privateers would join the Sun Belt Conference once again as the American South and Sun Belt Conference would merge.

After a few up and down years, the Privateers would once again find success in the 1996 season by earning a trip to the South II Regional in Baton Rouge as a 5 seed. In their first game, the Privateers would defeatGeorgia Tech by a score of 13–3 and would follow with a victory over cross town rivalTulane by a score of 13–5. In their third game, they would face host teamLSU and would ultimately lose before being eliminated by Georgia Tech in their fifth game.

Randy Bush (2000–2004)

[edit]

Before the 2000 campaign, the university would hire former player and two time World Series champion,Randy Bush, as the fourth head coach of the Privateers. In his first season, the Privateers would record their first regular season title since 1988 and their first in the Sun Belt. Despite not winning the conference tournament, they would earn a 2 seed in the Baton Rouge Regional due to their success in the regular season. In their first game of the regional they would fall toLouisiana-Monroe. Facing elimination, the Privateers would defeatJackson State before falling once again to Louisiana-Monroe.

Tom Walter and post-Katrina (2005–2009)

[edit]

Tom Walter was chosen to be the fifth head coach for the Privateers. Despite the tremendous damage sustained to the East Campus of UNO, the Privateers were able to salvage a winning season and a trip to the Sun Belt Tournament. Building on their success, the Privateers were able to take the Sun Belt Conference tournament championship in 2007, a feat that had eluded them since 1979, and their first NCAA regional berth since 2000. In the NCAA regionals, the Privateers shocked host team Wichita State in the first game before losing to Arizona 9–8 and Wichita State to be eliminated.

The Privateers were able continue their success by making it to the SBC Championship Game before losing to the Hilltoppers of Western Kentucky. Despite not winning an automatic bid, their regular season efforts were enough to earn them a spot as a 3 seed in the Baton Rouge Regional. They would eventually lose to Southern Miss, defeat Texas Southern in game 3, and be eliminated by in game 5 by Southern Miss.

Bruce Peddie and NCAA division relocation talks (2010–2013)

[edit]

With the exit of Tom Walter, and talks of a move toDivision III or eliminating athletics all together, Assistant Coach Bruce Peddie was promoted to head coach. The Privateers compiled a 13–39 through the 2010 season in their final campaign in the Sun Belt before they officially left the conference on June 30, 2010.[5] Despite being in division status limbo, the Privateers continued to play Division I opponents during the 2011 season as a Division I Independent and suffered another losing season.

The 2012 season marked the first season the baseball team would not be playing a full Division I schedule since 1975. Instead, the Privateers were accepted by theGulf South Conference as a provisional member. As such, the Privateer baseball team played a largely Division II schedule with the exception ofNicholls State,McNeese, andSouthern. On March 8, 2012, only 11 games into the 2012 season, Chancellor Peter Fos announced that the Privateers would not go through with their intention to compete as a Division II institution and would remain Division I.[6]

With their Division I status reinstated, the Privateers competed in the 2013 season as Division I Independents and completed a 7–44 record. On May 31, 2013, it was reported that Bruce Peddie was relieved of his duties as head coach.[7]

The return of Ron Maestri (2013–2015)

[edit]

On July 2, 2013, UNO Athletic Director Derek Morel announced that former baseball coach and athletic director,Ron Maestri, would be returning as the head coach after a 28-year absence from coaching.[8] On February 23, 2015, it was announced thatRon Washington was named volunteer assistant.[9]

On May 19, 2015, Ron Maestri announced his retirement as head coach of the Privateers, effective July 1, 2015. Maestri finished with a 543–315–1 record with the Privateers over two stints as head coach. His Privateer teams appeared in theNCAA Division I baseball tournament nine times and in theCollege World Series two times.[10]

Blake Dean (2016–2024)

[edit]

After being named interim coach on May 21, 2015,Blake Dean was named the seventh head baseball coach of the Privateers for the 2016 season.[11] The team nearly won as many games as they had won the previous three seasons (31 to 33) and more than doubled their win total (from 15 to 31) in Dean's first season earning a trip to theSouthland Conference tournament marking their first postseason appearance since 2008, which was the last time UNO was invited to the NCAA tournament. In his second year as head coach, the team started 5–0, and ended up defeating in-state rivalLSU twice in a season for the first time since 2008.[12] The Privateers once again reached the Southland Tournament but were eliminated by eventual championSam Houston State. The program won thirty games in a season in back-to-back years for the first time since the 2007–2008 seasons, and Blake Dean became the only other coach in program history besides Ron Maestri to begin their tenures with back-to-back winning seasons. Dean's 90 wins in his first three seasons trails only Tom Schwaner and Randy Bush for the most wins by a head coach in his first three seasons in school history, and is more than the previous 7 seasons combined (89) immediately preceding his arrival.

Head coaches

[edit]

Records are through the end of the 2022 baseball season.

TenureCoachYearsRecordPct.
1970–1971Bob Hines222–44.333
1972–1985Ron Maestri14517–245–1.678
1986–1999Tom Schwaner14462–373.553
2000–2004Randy Bush5144–145.498
2005–2009Tom Walter5153–147.510
2010–2013Bruce Peddie441–160.204
2014–2015Ron Maestri226–78.250
2016–2024Blake Dean8225–194–1.537
Totals54 seasons1621–1412–2.534

Year-by-year results

[edit]
Statistics overview
SeasonCoachOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Division II Independent(1970–1975)
1970Bob Hines8–19
1971Bob Hines14–25
1972Ron Maestri24–17
1973Ron Maestri26–13
1974Ron Maestri34–14D–II College World Series Runner-Up
1975Ron Maestri23–20
Sun Belt Conference(1976–1979)
1976Ron Maestri26–14–1
1977Ron Maestri35–9NCAA Regional
1978Ron Maestri35–161st
1979Ron Maestri49–141stNCAA Regional
Division I Independent(1980–1987)
1980Ron Maestri46–15NCAA Regional
1981Ron Maestri48–16NCAA Regional
1982Ron Maestri49–16NCAA Regional
1983Ron Maestri34–29
1984Ron Maestri45–24College World Series
1985Ron Maestri43–28NCAA Regional
1986Tom Schwaner29–30
1987Tom Schwaner44–19NCAA Regional
American South Conference(1988–1991)
1988Tom Schwaner42–2314–1NCAA Regional
1989Tom Schwaner33–3410–5NCAA Regional
1990Tom Schwaner37–2711–4
1991Tom Schwaner26–319–9
Sun Belt Conference(1992–2010)
1992Tom Schwaner27–2710–11
1993Tom Schwaner25–289–10
1994Tom Schwaner35–2316–8Sun Belt Tournament
1995Tom Schwaner36–2215–11Sun Belt Tournament
1996Tom Schwaner43–2119–8NCAA Regional
1997Tom Schwaner31–2511–15
1998Tom Schwaner29–2913–13Sun Belt Tournament
1999Tom Schwaner25–3415–18Sun Belt Tournament
2000Randy Bush38–2520–9NCAA Regional
2001Randy Bush25–3213–14Sun Belt Tournament
2002Randy Bush31–2812–125thSun Belt Tournament
2003Randy Bush23–327–179th
2004Randy Bush27–2813–103rdSun Belt Tournament
2005Tom Walter20–3910–147thSun Belt Tournament
2006Tom Walter30–2812–12T–4thSun Belt Tournament
2007Tom Walter38–2616–14T–2ndNCAA Regional
2008Tom Walter43–2118–112ndNCAA Regional
2009Tom Walter22–3312–18T–9th
2010Bruce Peddie13–392–2611th
Division I Independent(2011)
2011Bruce Peddie4–50
Division II Independent(2012)
2012Bruce Peddie17–27
Division I Independent(2013)
2013Bruce Peddie7–44
Southland Conference(2014–Present)
2014Ron Maestri11–382–2814th
2015Ron Maestri15–403–2713th
2016Blake Dean31–2614–16T–7thSouthland tournament
2017Blake Dean30–28–116–14T–7thSouthland tournament
2018Blake Dean29–3214–16T–7thSouthland tournament
2019Blake Dean29–2713–17T–9th
2020Blake Dean11–62–1T–2nd[n 1]
2021Blake Dean29–2823–173rdSouthland Tournament
2022Blake Dean30–2313–113rdSouthland tournament
2023Blake Dean36–2413–11T–3rdSouthland tournament
Total:1621–1412–2

      National champion        Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion        Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion      Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

(Records as of May 27, 2023)
Source:[13]

NCAA tournament History

[edit]
YearRecordPctNotes
19771–2.333Eliminated byBaylor in the South Central Regional semifinals
19791–2.333Eliminated byMississippi State in the South Regional semifinals
19801–2.333Eliminated byWestern Kentucky in the South Regional semifinals
19811–2.333Eliminated byMichigan in the Mideast Regional semifinals
19822–2.500Eliminated byWichita State in the South Regional Finals
19845–3.625Won the South II Regional
College World Series (5th place)
19851–2.333Eliminated byMichigan in the South I Regional semifinals
19872–2.500Eliminated byLSU in the South II Regional semifinals
19880–2.000Eliminated byTexas in the Central Regional Second Round
19893–2.600Eliminated byTexas in the Midwest Regional Finals
19962–2.500Eliminated byGeorgia Tech in the South II Regional semifinals
20001–2.333Eliminated byLouisiana–Monroe in the Baton Rouge Regional Second Round
20071–2.333Eliminated byWichita State in the Wichita Regional Second Round
20081–2.333Eliminated bySouthern Miss in the Baton Rouge Regional Second Round
Total22–29.43114 NCAA tournament Appearances
1 College World Series Appearance

Awards

[edit]
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  • Golden Spikes AwardAugie Schmidt (1982)
  • NCAA Division I All-American Selections –Augie Schmidt (1982),Ted Wood (1987)
  • NCAA Division II All-American Selections – Eric Rasmussen (1973), Terry Kieffer (1974)
  • NCAA College World Series All-Tournament Team – Scott Raziano (1984)
  • Sun Belt Conference Freshman/Rookie of the Year – Steve Stanson (1995)
  • Sun Belt Conference Pitcher of the Year –Thomas Diamond (2004), Bryan Cryer (2008)
  • Sun Belt Coach of the Year – Ron Maestri (1979)

Professional players

[edit]

Privateers in the Majors

[edit]
AthleteYears ActiveTeam(s)
Eric Rasmussen1975–1983St. Louis Cardinals (1975–1978, 1982–1983)
San Diego Padres (1978–1980)
Kansas City Royals (1983)
Roger Erickson1978–1983Minnesota Twins (1978–1982)
New York Yankees(1982–1983)
Randy Bush1982–1993Minnesota Twins (1982–1993)
Wally Whitehurst1989–1996New York Mets (1989–1992)
San Diego Padres (1993–1994)
New York Yankees (1996)
Mark Higgins1989Cleveland Indians (1989)
Brian Traxler1990Los Angeles Dodgers (1990)
Ted Wood1991–1993San Francisco Giants (1991–1992)
Montreal Expos (1993)
Joe Slusarski1991–1993, 1995, 1999–2001Oakland Athletics (1991–1993)
Milwaukee Brewers (1995)
Houston Astros (1999–2001)
Atlanta Braves (2001)
Jim Bullinger1992–1998Chicago Cubs (1992–1996)
Montreal Expos (1997)
Seattle Mariners (1998)
Jason Waddell^2009Chicago Cubs (2009)
Thomas Diamond2010Chicago Cubs (2010)
Johnny Giavotella2011–PresentKansas City Royals (2011–Present)
Joey Butler2013Texas Rangers (2013)

^Jason Waddell played for the Privateers in 2000 before transferring to Riverside Community College

Source:[14]

Major League Baseball

[edit]

New Orleans has had 89Major League Baseball Draft selections since the draft began in 1965.[15]

Privateers in the Major League Baseball Draft
YearPlayerRoundTeam
1974Thomas Rima15Astros
1975Richard McCarthy17Orioles
1975Gary Purcell11Red Sox
1976Brian Snitker25Cubs
1976Randal Miller1Padres
1977Joseph Bennett26Twins
1977Eugene Robinson24Twins
1977Roger Erickson3Twins
1979Paul Manieri32White Sox
1979Bill Lampey27Twins
1979Mike Quade22Pirates
1979Manuel Colletti15Twins
1979David Froelich14Padres
1979Randy Bush2Twins
1980Joe Housey2Cubs
1980Kevin McGann15Mariners
1980John Schaive11Pirates
1980Kirby Krueger7Twins
1981Mark Christy26Padres
1981Howard Brodsky22Mariners
1981Ronn Dixon11Mariners
1982Paul Mancuso31Twins
1982Thomas Graziano30Pirates
1982Brian Devalk7Pirates
1982Jim Opie2Pirates
1982Augie Schmidt1Blue Jays
1983Jim Cesario34Rangers
1983Dave Harman24Rangers
1983Scott Raziano22Yankees
1984Mark Higgins1Indians
1984Steve Oswald17White Sox
1984Scott Raziano6Expos
1985Scott Ayers2Expos
1985Wally Whitehurst3Athletics
1986Stuart Weidie22Red Sox
1986Jim Bullinger9Cubs
1987David Lynch22Rangers
1987Rob Mason21Expos
1987Joe Slusarski6Mariners
1988Nicholas Macaluso49Phillies
1988Jeffrey Ingram43White Sox
1988Rouglas Odor32Indians
1988Greg Perschke23Braves
1988Brian Traxler16Dodgers
1988Charlie White3Cardinals
1988Joe Slusarski2Athletics
1988Ted Wood1Giants
1989Phillip Wiese25Twins
1989Greg Perschke24White Sox
1990Bo Loftin35Reds
1990Sean Franceschi34Royals
1990Bradley Stuart30Yankees
1990Glenn Osinski28Athletics
1990Dom DeSantis28Orioles
1990Todd Pick14Marlins
1991Bradley Stuart36Rangers
1991John Herrholz29White Sox
1991Dom DeSantis20Phillies
1991Armando Morales10Reds
1992Aaron Lane24Orioles
1993Doug Angeli16Phillies
1993Darrell Nicholas4Cardinals
1994Jon Mathews42Rockies
1994Lenny Weber23Indians
1994Christian Westcott21Red Sox
1994Scott Krause10Brewers
1994Darrell Nicholas4Brewers
1996Jason Washam41Brewers
1996Joe DiSalvo22Astros
1997Jason Faust36Athletics
2000Sammy Cooper45Cubs
2001Jeff Miller15Pirates
2004Joe Pietro9Marlins
2004J.P. Martinez9Twins
2004Thomas Diamond1Rangers
2006Michael Epping13Padres
2007Drew Anderson22Astros
2007Adam Campbell16Marlins
2008Mark McGonigle43Mets
2008Ryan O'Shea27Orioles
2008T.J. Baxter24Orioles
2008Joey Butler15Rangers
2008Jeff Lanning8Twins
2008Johnny Giavotella2Royals
2009John Pivach46Red Sox
2009Nick Schwaner42Giants
2010Nick Schwaner30Rays
2013Stone Speer25Rays
2015Kevin Kelleher12Red Sox
2017Shawn Semple17Yankees

Trivia

[edit]
  • The Privateers have had 2 players compete on the U.S. Olympic Baseball Team. Joe Slusarski and Ted Wood were both members of the 1988 gold medal team in theSeoul, South Korea Olympics.[citation needed]
  • As of the 2013 MLB draft, a total of 82 Privateers have been selected.[16]
  • The highest drafted Privateer was Augie Schmidt in 1982 as the 2nd overall pick to the Toronto Blue Jays.
  • The Privateers have finished top 15 in attendance 8 times. The highest mark achieved was 85,884 spectators in 1987.[17]
  • Staff members at Maestri Field were awarded the Groundskeeper of the Year by the American Baseball Coaches Association in 1991.[17]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Season suspended indefinitely on March 13, 2020 and ultimately canceled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic

References

[edit]
  1. ^New Orleans Privateers – Official Brand Identity(PDF). July 13, 2016. RetrievedApril 23, 2017.
  2. ^"New Orleans Privateers". d1baseball.com. RetrievedNovember 2, 2012.
  3. ^"University Of New Orleans – Important Dates in Privateer History".University of New Orleans. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  4. ^"History of New Orleans Baseball". RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  5. ^"New Orleans pulls plug on Sun Belt membership".ESPN. January 20, 2010. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  6. ^"UNO Privateers decide to remain in NCAA Division I".ESPN. March 9, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  7. ^"New Orleans Privateers fire baseball coach Bruce Peddie".ESPN. May 31, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  8. ^"UNO welcomes Ron Maestri back as baseball coach, hoping to resurrect and rebuild program - NOLA.com".NOLA.com. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  9. ^"Ex-Texas Rangers manager Ron Washington filling time volunteering but anxious to return to Major League Baseball".
  10. ^Brandon Scardigli (May 19, 2015)."Maestri Announces Retirement from New Orleans Baseball". University of New Orleans. RetrievedMay 24, 2015.
  11. ^Brandon Scardigli (May 21, 2015)."Blake Dean Named Interim Head Coach of Privateers Baseball". University of New Orleans. RetrievedMay 24, 2015.
  12. ^"Baseball Prevails 7–4 Against No. 6 LSU In 15-Inning Game". University of New Orleans. March 16, 2017. RetrievedApril 4, 2018.
  13. ^"2004 New Orleans - the Baseball Cube".
  14. ^"University of New Orleans Baseball Players".Baseball Reference. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  15. ^"MLB Amateur Draft Picks who came from "University of New Orleans (New Orleans, LA)"".Baseball-Reference.com. RetrievedJune 13, 2015.
  16. ^"MLB Amateur Draft Picks who came from "University of New Orleans (New Orleans, LA)"".Baseball Reference. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.
  17. ^ab"University Of New Orleans – Maestri Field". RetrievedSeptember 16, 2014.

External links

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